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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Column: Teacher Upholds Constitution
Title:US CA: Column: Teacher Upholds Constitution
Published On:2000-04-12
Source:Orange County Register (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-04 21:53:09
TEACHER UPHOLDS CONSTITUTION

In 40 years of traveling around the country, speaking at high schools and
middle schools on the Bill of Rights and the rest of the Constitution, I
have found only a few teachers who can bring the words off the page and
into the lives of their students.

One of the most passionately knowledgeable of those teachers is Sherry
Hearn. Voted Teacher of the Year at Windsor Forest High School in Savannah,
Ga., she has taught social studies and constitutional law there for 27 years.

As at many schools in the nation, Windsor Forest students are occasionally
subject without warning to dragnet raids by the police, who herd the
students into the hallways and use dogs to sniff the students, their purses
and their book bags. Metal detectors are used to scan students' bodies. The
students are locked into the building for two to three hours while the
police perform the search. Contrary to the specific words of the Fourth
Amendment to the Bill of Rights, the searches are conducted without any
particular information that any student has used or is using drugs. All of
them are presumed guilty of possessing drugs or weapons unless a police dog
or metal detector exonerates them.

Sherry Hearn taught her students for years about how the Fourth Amendment
came into being because of the privacy abuses suffered by American
colonists due to the sweeping searches and seizures performed by British
troops. During one of these police sweeps on her school, a student asked
her why she was so angry at the raid.

"Because I believe in the Constitution," she said.

A policeman overheard her, reported her to the principal and said she
should be watched during the next lockdown. At the next dragnet search, the
police also searched the teachers' cars in the parking lot in violation of
a school policy that teachers' cars could not be searched without the
consent of their owners. Hearn was not asked for her consent.

A police dog found that morning half of a hand-rolled marijuana cigarette
in an ashtray in her car. It was still warm. Sherry Hearn had been in the
school the entire morning.

That night, a caller on the country's Silent Witness line said that the
cigarette had been planted in the car. He did not give his identity. The
cigarette was never produced as evidence.

According to school policy, Hearn was told she had to take a drug test
within two hours of being informed that an illegal substance had been found
in her car. She had no record at all of previous drug use, and the
principal, Linda Herman, later testified that the teacher had not exhibited
on the day of the search, or on any other day, the characteristic behavior
that would have given rise to a "reasonable suspicion" that the marijuana
cigarette was hers.

On that day, however, Hearn was given her Miranda warnings and was ordered
to take a urine test in two hours. She wanted to contact her lawyer before
taking the test, but he was unavailable that day. Not having legal advice,
she refused. She also said, "How can I face my students after I've
consistently told them that these mass drug searches violate their
constitutional rights?" The next day, having spoken to her attorney, she
underwent a urinalysis, and it proved negative for marijuana or any other
controlled substance.

No criminal charges were ever filed against Sherry Hearn, but she was fired
in the spring of 1996 for not having taken the urine test within the two
hours set forth in the school's policy.

She has had great difficulty getting a teaching job since losing her job,
and has lost her appeals to the Georgia State Board of Education and in the
lower federal courts.

Sherry Hearn's last chance to get back to teaching constitutional law to
students rest with the United States Supreme Court.

Her attorneys, including a lawyer for the Rutherford Institute, are asking
the Supreme Court to decide whether "public school students and teachers
have the right to be free from suspicionless mass drug searches on campus"
and whether "Hearn should have been ordered to take a drug test based on
alleged contraband that was illegally seized."

It's up to the Supreme Court to tell Sherry Hearn's students - and other
young Americans throughout the land - whether she was right in advising
students "Never, ever give up your rights that people have paid for in
blood just because it's the easy thing to do."
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